Menu

January 30: Night Instruction

The middle of the night is a great time to have a worry-fest. You wake up for some reason, and then you don’t go immediately back to sleep, so your mind wanders. Before you know it, you are fretting over any number of things.

Often these things come in the form of self-examination. “I am too lazy. I am a bad mom. I should exercise more. I am a terrible wife. No body likes me. I will probably die of a heart attack if I don’t start dieting.”

I learned long ago that I am always a better mom in the morning than I am in the middle of the night. What I am getting at here is the tendency some of us might have of getting very negative in the middle of the night. (Or in the middle of the day…it doesn’t much matter when this happens.)

But the Bible says that our heart should instruct us in the night. We ought not to be listening to a bunch of false accusations about ourselves. Rather we ought to be instructing ourselves.

Let’s look at the context of verses 7-8: “I will bless the Lord who has given me counsel; my heart also instructs me in the night seasons. I have set the Lord always before me; because He is at my right hand I shall not be moved.”

God has given us counsel, so we can instruct ourselves late at night. What might we remind ourselves in the middle of the night? The Lord is always near….at my right hand. So I shall not be shaken.

The Holy Spirit is the Comforter, not the accuser. We must learn to distinguish these two. If you are accusing yourself, you are talking like the devil. That’s the language he speaks. The Holy Spirit counsels us, instructs us so we can instruct ourselves.

The result that follows is found in verse 9: “Therefore my heart is glad, and my glory rejoices; my flesh also will rest in hope.” That means sweet sleep.

My husband read this on his phone, and came and found it for me to read on the laptop. He said it would encourage me. Indeed it has! I feel like this was written specifically for me today. Thank you, Nancy! :]

I wrote a note from Sunday’s sermon on my bulletin: “God’s conversation is full of comfort. The devil’s conversation is full of accusation.” I’ve been thinking about this all week and it’s been a comfort and a help. Thanks for encouraging us all to meditate on this.

Thanks for this! My husband looked over and saw the title while I was reading it and said “hmm, sounds like a good thing for you to read.” I’m not sure what he was referring to, unless it was the two nights last week when he woke up to me sobbing in near panic in the middle of the night (granted, they were the first two nights after the birth of our third child under 3 and things were a little hectic and hormonal and all… but, good to be reminded that God’s grace applies also to newborn seasons!)